The emails have sparked the debate whether Fauci chose to remain mum despite knowing about the onset of the virus.
A Chinese virologist, who was one of the first to recommend the COVID-19 virus from the Wuhan board, said emails from top US coronavirus adviser Anthony Fauci showed he was right all the time.
Fauci's email church, which is investigating the onset of the outbreak of coronavirus, was released this week to the media under a request for freedom of information.
In a single email sent out last April, a health organization official thanked Fauci for publicly stating that scientific evidence does not support the leaked theory.
Dr. Li-Meng Yan is one of the first to research the emerging coronavirus and previously revealed that he was forced to hide after accusing Beijing of hiding, reports The New York Post.
Now, as world leaders finally focus on his Wuhan lab-leak theory, the scientist has told Newsmax that Fauci's emails contain "many useful details" indicating that he always knows more than he has revealed.
"They confirmed my work from the beginning, even last January, that these people knew what had happened, but chose to hide the Chinese Communist Party of China and take advantage of it," Yan said of a repository released by the church.
"He knows all these things," he emphasized to Fauci and the visible work done by the Wuhan Institute of Virology in the city center where the first epidemic broke out.
He said in one email, indicating that "Dr. Fauci came back on February 1 last year and immediately realized that there would be a job search involved in the COVID-19 virus."
More than 3,000 email pages have been received by Washington Post, Buzzfeed News and CNN through applications of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), from January to June 2020.
The emails have cleared up the controversy over whether Fauci chose to stay with her mother despite knowing about the onset of the virus.
Emails revealed the first days of the US Covid outbreak. Dr. Fauci and colleagues noted, in the early days, the view that COVID-19 may have been leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China.
Fauci's email church, which is investigating the onset of the outbreak of coronavirus, was released this week to the media under a request for freedom of information.
In a single email sent out last April, a health organization official thanked Fauci for publicly stating that scientific evidence does not support the leaked theory.
Dr. Li-Meng Yan is one of the first to research the emerging coronavirus and previously revealed that he was forced to hide after accusing Beijing of hiding, reports The New York Post.
Now, as world leaders finally focus on his Wuhan lab-leak theory, the scientist has told Newsmax that Fauci's emails contain "many useful details" indicating that he always knows more than he has revealed.
"They confirmed my work from the beginning, even last January, that these people knew what had happened, but chose to hide the Chinese Communist Party of China and take advantage of it," Yan said of a repository released by the church.
"He knows all these things," he emphasized to Fauci and the visible work done by the Wuhan Institute of Virology in the city center where the first epidemic broke out.
He said in one email, indicating that "Dr. Fauci came back on February 1 last year and immediately realized that there would be a job search involved in the COVID-19 virus."
More than 3,000 email pages have been received by Washington Post, Buzzfeed News and CNN through applications of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), from January to June 2020.
The emails have cleared up the controversy over whether Fauci chose to stay with her mother despite knowing about the onset of the virus.
Emails revealed the first days of the US Covid outbreak. Dr. Fauci and colleagues noted, in the early days, the view that COVID-19 may have been leaked from a laboratory in Wuhan, China.
In an interview with CNN, Fauci said the email was taken out of context by critics and was "open-minded" about the origin of the virus.
Regarding the "moth leak" email, the doctor told CNN that he still found it impossible for the Wuhan laboratory to detect the virus.
"I don't remember what in this [email] was reconstructed, but the idea I think is not true is that the Chinese are deliberately doing something to be able to kill themselves and other people," he said.
While criticizing international opposition to the origins of the virus and new reports of Covid-related illnesses in the region weeks before it was officially identified, the theory once again sparked controversy.